PORTLAND, OR--(May 6, 2014)
Barbara Buttrick, 84 year old Englishwoman and ground breaking
pioneer in the sport of Women's boxing, has been elected to the
initial class of the newly established International Women's
Boxing Hall of Fame. She will be inducted, along with six other
female honorees, at a ceremony on July 10 in Fort Lauderdale,
FL, in conjunction with a scheduled national Female Golden
Gloves tournament. Buttrick, who founded the Women's
International Boxing Foundation (WIBF) in 1989, said from her
home in Miami, FL, "I'm very excited and proud to be chosen for
the first class of this Hall of Fame, which, I believe, going
forward, will serve as a lasting recognition of the athletes and
others in the boxing community who have contributed to and
supported the sport of Women's boxing."
Buttrick enters the IWBHF as one
of six former professional fighters being inducted in the
initial class: Christy Martin, Lucia Rijker, Regina Halmich and
Bonnie Canino from the "modern" era of the sport, the decades of
1990s and 2000, along with Jo-Ann Hagen, a boxer who competed
professionally at the same time as Buttrick, in the 1950s.
Christy Halbert, the seventh inductee also spent, what she
describes as a "short career" as in the professional ring, but
is being honored, primarily, as a highly sought after boxing
coach and for the pivotal role she played in the successful
effort to get the sport of female boxing included in the 2012
Olympics.
Barbara Buttrick grew up in
England and, as a teen, following a brief foray with football
(soccer), gravitated towards boxing, partially, as a result of
her father's interest in the sport. Her teenage bedroom walls
were festooned with cutouts of boxers and her evolution to the
sport eventually resulted in competitive bouts in the ring.
However, as Buttrick is quick to note, those early bouts were
largely limited to "boxing booths and small shows," given the
apathy English promoters showed towards females in the boxing
ring. It soon became apparent to the fledging boxer that if she
was to attain professional status, it would most probably be
somewhere other than England. Buttrick adds, "As it turned out,
recognition of females in the professional ring in England
didn't happen until Jane Couch sued for the right to fight in
the 1990s."
Thus in 1952, Buttrick embarked
for the United States and discovered only slightly better
potential for female boxers. But opportunities, particularly for
females with clearly defined ring skills, did exist. In fact,
one of the highly publicized female bouts in 1954 was an eight
round bout between Buttrick and her fellow IWBHF inductee,
Jo-Ann Hagen. The bout, held in Calgary Alberta, Canada was
broadcast throughout that country.
Hagen, who enjoyed a height and
weight advantage won the decision and was quoted after the bout,
"She (Buttrick) was a real battler, I'm sorry we both couldn't
have won." Records of female boxers in those years are, today,
largely non-existent (Boxrec lists only two bouts for Buttrick,
a win and a draw with Phyliss Kugler), while Buttrick puts her
overall record at 30 wins, one loss (Hagen) and the draw with
Kugler. Despite her success and growing renown in the US, back
home in England, the attitude toward female boxers persisted. In
1957, Freddie Mills, ranking English light heavyweight fighter,
felt compelled to pen an opinion, in the London Daily Mirror,
stating he did not recognize female boxing as legitimate and
advised Buttrick to "forget" about the sport. Fortunately that
was not the final paragraph of the story. In 2010, in
conjunction with the announcement of the inclusion of female
boxing in the 2012 Olympics, the Daily Mirror headlined a story,
"We're Sorry Barbara" retracting Mills' long ago comments and
praising Buttrick's extensive career in the professional ring.
While it took the London Daily Mirror 53 years to correct the
prejudicial diatribe leveled, in it's pages, at Buttrick, the
International Women's Boxing Hall of Fame got it right the first
time. Buttrick was an overwhelming choice for inclusion in the
initial class of the Hall. It was, in part, recognition of the
many hurdles Buttrick overcame in her quest toward the
professional boxing ring. And it was that quest that contributed
to laying the groundwork for the path that was followed, over
the years and to this day, by what has become the deep well of
ring talent that populates the sport of Women's boxing. That
should be crystal clear to all those in attendance in July at
the National Golden Gloves program and the IWBHF induction
ceremony. Barbara Buttrick, along with her co-inductees, can all
take justified pride in the honors bestowed upon them and,
synergistically, in the opportunities, such as a female Golden
Gloves tournament, that exists today for their heirs.
Press Release Written by: Bernie McCoy